Are CPU Coolers A Waste Of Money?

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  • Опубліковано 24 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 753

  • @techquickie
    @techquickie  Рік тому +81

    Thanks to Hostinger for sponsoring this video! Head on over to hostinger.com/techquickie and use code TECHQUICKIE to save 10% today!

  • @Yourowner
    @Yourowner Рік тому +2471

    Best business decision Linus ever made was hiring this guy

    • @PierceMD
      @PierceMD Рік тому +217

      Was he really hired if he was picked up from the dumpster?

    • @aaronlay1210
      @aaronlay1210 Рік тому +97

      my favorite tech news host

    • @cyrilio
      @cyrilio Рік тому +7

      +

    • @bentilley5412
      @bentilley5412 Рік тому +159

      ​​​@@PierceMDit was a business decision to buy the snacks to tempt him out and gain his trust.
      You can't just grab a feral Riley - the shock could really unsettle him. Depending how long he'd been in the dumpster, he may have invested significant time in de-cluttering it, and feel safe and comfortable.

    • @brovid-19
      @brovid-19 Рік тому +20

      No, that would have been Madison.

  • @Elrond_Hubbard1
    @Elrond_Hubbard1 11 місяців тому +59

    As an old fart from the eighties, I never cease to be amazed that half, or maybe even more, of owning a PC nowadays is about tweaking and benchmarking rather than actually playing games. Reminds me of the gearheads whose cars are perpetually in their garages getting tiny tweaks for that extra third of a horsepower.

    • @amooingdog3297
      @amooingdog3297 5 місяців тому +8

      Only a small subset of people are like this, barely anyone else cares. Imagine gaming rig enthusiasts are the linux users of the online pc community

    • @GruntoSkunko
      @GruntoSkunko 4 місяці тому

      @@amooingdog3297 Windows is spyware and bloatware.

    • @jasona2007
      @jasona2007 Місяць тому +1

      honestly I don't even enjoy videogames that much anymore. It's just my monkey brain likes swapping parts for something bigger and better.

  • @why_though
    @why_though Рік тому +238

    This raises an important question... we benchmark CPU performance per dollar to ridiculous standards but never take into account the price of the cooler. For example, could a 14700k with a stock cooler be a better choice for the same price than a 13600k with a nice cooler? Or any other combination of CPUs for that matter... Should we be testing CPUs with stock coolers as well as with 'adequate' cooling to actually be able to determine which combination of CPU and cooler is actually the best performance per dollar at a certain price point?
    Edit: 13600k->14600k

    • @harixxt
      @harixxt Рік тому +11

      That would be an interesting test. Just seeing the difference between the stock cooler and a better one would already be a good enough indicator, I think.
      Edit: But also consider, that some CPUs are not delivered with a cooler at all.

    • @Mohegan13
      @Mohegan13 Рік тому +4

      In the UK the 14700K is around £380 the 13600K (which I own) is £299 + £10 for an Arctic i35 (I paid £30 for the A-RGB version) with a 200-1700RPM range I find it performs great for an overclocked 13600k. I've never come close to thermal throttling. For me the huge saving over the 14 series was worth it. I guess it really comes down to how much you'd drop on a cooler when the cheaper options perform exceedingly well.

    • @why_though
      @why_though 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Mohegan13Sorry I meant 14700k vs 14600k. Or in your case 13600k vs13700k. With your cooler you are almost at the price of the 13700k. The question was, would you be better off just getting the 13700k and using the stock cooler... More cores is probably going to give you much more performance than cooling an inferior chip. After all stock coolers don't really result in much thermal throttling at all these days.

    • @vespaman101
      @vespaman101 11 місяців тому +1

      You can usually get an adequate liquid cooler for 50 bucks these days. Or air coolers for 30 to 40 bucks. I don't think that price is high enough really to be the biggest factor. Especially if you can bring a cpu cooler with you to your next system.

    • @why_though
      @why_though 11 місяців тому +1

      @@vespaman101 What the hell are you talking about, the difference between 14600k and 14700k is literally 6 extra cores (8 threds) for just around $100 which is gonna be only about 10% of the total system cost! You can't say a cooler will give you anywhere near half of that performance.

  • @lywellyn0
    @lywellyn0 Рік тому +434

    Cheap tower air cooler for life. Used a CoolerMaster one for a long time, then upgraded to a Noctua a while back. It's been with me for two CPU upgrades already and my mid-range CPU still gets all the headroom it needs. Never going water cooling unless something changes drastically. Don't need that headache.

    • @g00ts
      @g00ts Рік тому +27

      Since when is Noctua cheap? You can get a Jonsbo one for about 11$ and it has aRGB

    • @lywellyn0
      @lywellyn0 Рік тому +32

      @@g00ts compared to basically any decent water cooling, a $50 knock to a tower cooler is cheap.

    • @harrytsang1501
      @harrytsang1501 Рік тому +9

      Rolled with a relatively cheap cooler master 212 for a really long time. Recently got a thermalright with the same design but only around $10 brand new.
      The time I tried water cooling AIO, I paid $100 and still have the pump die within a few months

    • @ouroesa
      @ouroesa Рік тому +2

      100% agree. Got a fairly decent AIO cooler and was very disappointed vs my old CM Evo 212

    • @CreativityNull
      @CreativityNull Рік тому +8

      Unless I go custom water cooling for aesthetics or extremely small form factor, I'm not touching water cooling personally. No hate just not worth it for me.

  • @workinprogress8978
    @workinprogress8978 Рік тому +70

    As long as you can fit it and the slightly more amount of noise isn't an issue (barely any to be honest with some tower air coolers), tower air coolers like the Noctua DH-15, are the simplest route for most builders in my opinion.

    • @eequalswtf6281
      @eequalswtf6281 11 місяців тому

      I use a noctua nh-D15 cooler with a rx 7800 Xt and ryzen 9 5950x, I can't even hear the cpu cooler under load.

    • @workinprogress8978
      @workinprogress8978 11 місяців тому

      @@eequalswtf6281 Isn't it wonderful? Well worth the ouchy in price and can be reused in future builds.

    • @mattwest8073
      @mattwest8073 11 місяців тому

      Noise (acoustics) is the reason that I have to use a simple aftermarket air cooler for the CPU.

    • @kkit7540
      @kkit7540 11 місяців тому

      Originally bought the nh-d15 for my ryzen 2600 that i was overclocking and it dropped my temps by 20ºc. Cross decked it into my new am5 build and sits on my 7600x which run hot from the factory. Never have to worry about it with the v8 sitting on the top

    • @Notorious544d
      @Notorious544d 11 місяців тому

      Nh d15 is way overkill. Most people only need a single tower. A Thermalright costs under £20. The D15 is £100. Spend the difference on a better GPU

  • @bahamutbbob
    @bahamutbbob Рік тому +149

    I got an NHD15 because I knew it would last probably forever. The fans will eventually die, but the heatsink will last for years, decades even. If Noctua is still around, they'll keep making mounting hardware for it, so I'll keep using it.

    • @Hydra_X9K_Music
      @Hydra_X9K_Music Рік тому +9

      And that 6 year warranty is amazing if for some reason something does fail during that time

    • @Marauder-q2v
      @Marauder-q2v Рік тому +21

      Dunno if the value proposition is there. You could buy 3 peerless assassins with that same price

    • @Hydra_X9K_Music
      @Hydra_X9K_Music Рік тому +7

      @user-bf5qh3ih4u Yes but will it last long term? Is there any warranty for broken or malfunctioning parts? The cooler itself looks great but the fans look a bit on the cheap side. At the very least Noctua is a very trusted brand that will support its customers with 6 year warranty with free replacements and new mounting brackets. Also their fans are some of the best on the market and have been for awhile. The NF A12x25 fans are ridiculously powerful and also really quiet. I don't mind paying extra for tried, tested, and true products with amazing quality and amazing warranty support.

    • @sm7085
      @sm7085 Рік тому +9

      @@Hydra_X9K_Music thermalright are a very reputable brand. Their coolers are on par with other big names at a fraction of the price. I believe they’ve even been in the market a little longer than noctua.

    • @Hybris51129
      @Hybris51129 Рік тому +4

      ​@@Marauder-q2vConsidering the performance of a D15 is it will be able to handle the cooling needs of future processors with ease to the point that it will likely not even be something that will even come to mind with subsequent builds.
      Performance especially over the long term is value.

  • @Castigar48
    @Castigar48 Рік тому +133

    Considering the ryzen 7000 series runs hot. Yes it helps alot. As well as 13th and 14th gen intel run very hot as well

    • @troybakker7628
      @troybakker7628 Рік тому +23

      yeah especially nowadays when a cpu boosts untill it hits a certain temperature a bigger cooler can mean a lower temperature which means it can boost faster and longer

    • @monketok141
      @monketok141 Рік тому +2

      Pbo is your friend

    • @bablela26
      @bablela26 Рік тому +2

      Yeah I can confirm my i9-14900KF does run hot even with the biggest air cooler.
      Meanwhile my old I5-4670k was fine at 5.2GHz overclock on a 212 evo XD

    • @Castigar48
      @Castigar48 Рік тому

      @bablela26 how old is your 4670k. Not familiar with it. Also brave for even having a big air cooler.

    • @catriona_drummond
      @catriona_drummond Рік тому +5

      Heck I bought an i5 12500 2 years ago. Even that struggled with the stock cooler.
      And some of the AM4 based Ryzens I worked with actually started dropping boost clocks already upon reaching 65° C

  • @svpracer98
    @svpracer98 Рік тому +18

    Running a 240 AIO on my latest build, and the fact my workload temps are what my air cooled rig used to see at idle was quite something...

    • @kingzach74
      @kingzach74 Рік тому +4

      I love my 240 AIO. It's so silent and never ramps up regardless of what kind of load I throw at it. The only kind of air that I ever feel out of my PC is cold air. It actually helps to cool my tiny apartment down a tiny bit during the summer which is kind of wild since most people say their PCs heat their homes.

    • @pedrosoares7273
      @pedrosoares7273 11 місяців тому

      You still get GPU fan noise so I don't really think a cpu cooler needs to be a lot quieter than a GPU. A AIO that big is overkill

    • @loganricherson
      @loganricherson 10 місяців тому +4

      ​@kingzach74 I can promise you that your pc isn't cooling down your apartment. That's not how physics work. Your Radiator sends out the heat from your cpu into the air. You're making the same, if not more, amount of heat energy by your cpu, even if it's hooked in a waterloop. The only exception is if you have your Radiator pointed out a window or something

    • @Dankyjrthethird
      @Dankyjrthethird 10 місяців тому

      @@kingzach74
      bruh
      i need to lie down after reading this one
      that AIO do sound nice tho

    • @PeterPing
      @PeterPing 6 місяців тому

      Either you run on stock air cooler or you have a shitty air cooler.

  • @GamingForTheRecentlyDeceased
    @GamingForTheRecentlyDeceased Рік тому +29

    Living in Australia, an after-market cooler is nesecarry even in winter. Even without any overclocking

  • @BryceMcSherry
    @BryceMcSherry Рік тому +57

    Techquickie, great for when the answer to a question is "It depends".

  • @triadwarfare
    @triadwarfare Рік тому +17

    Regarding stock coolers, the one from the old FX-8350 is definitely not enough. The processor burned itself along with the motherboard while running Prime 95 while I was ordering pizza. I had to fight my right for RMA since I didn't overclock it when it happened.

    • @Hypercheeker
      @Hypercheeker 11 місяців тому +3

      certified FX moment

    • @1slotmech
      @1slotmech 11 місяців тому

      I still have my 8120 and 8320 but I never ran stock coolers on either.

    • @sassuki
      @sassuki 11 місяців тому

      it's the motherboard, not the processor. Many people did not understand at the time, that you can't put a 125W CPU on a cheap motherboard with 5 or 6 phases. Besides, running Prime95 is still the worst thing you can do today, as it heats up the system even more than Premiere. If it can do video encoding, it will run everything just fine. Stop using Prime95 guys, just run the CPU-Z stress test; if that one runs fine, you're good to go for EVERYTHING - unless you're a NASA scientist ;p

  • @johanlahti84
    @johanlahti84 Рік тому +84

    Get a NH-D15 or equivalent cooler and use it for 15 years and like 4 builds

    • @Nick_Tank
      @Nick_Tank Рік тому +6

      That’s what I did with the Hyper 212 😂😂😂😂 since 2015, and just last year got an AIO kit😂😂

    • @bodiwire
      @bodiwire Рік тому +4

      My last build had a big noctua cooler. Performance was great, but my only issue with them is the physical size. They often cover the ram slots and make reaching certain connections impossible without removing that chonker first. That's the main reason I went with an aio liquid cooler this time. It's much easier to deal with for maintenance and upgrades. The noctua was quieter though, so I guess it just comes down to preference.

    • @mezu-e
      @mezu-e Рік тому +1

      ​@@bodiwire NH-D15S or NH-U12A have better clearance with similar performance

    • @bretthake7713
      @bretthake7713 Рік тому

      ​@@mezu-e also the C14S is a sleeper hit, great little cooler!

    • @mrlightwriter
      @mrlightwriter Рік тому

      I bought my NH-D15 in 2013, went to a second build and it will surely go to a third build!

  • @4RILDIGITAL
    @4RILDIGITAL Рік тому +2

    As a casual user, I'll stick with my stock cooler for now, but will consider upgrading if I delve into overclocking or hit thermal limits. Thanks for simplifying these concepts.

    • @christophervanzetta
      @christophervanzetta 11 місяців тому

      Totally. Stock cooling is designed for light and casual use.
      You only need better air cooling or an AIO if you are gaming or doing sustained heavy work loads

  • @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays
    @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays Рік тому +42

    Best decision I made was getting a thermalright assassin 120mm tower cooler. Cheap, amazing upgrade from stock and kept the chip nice and cool.
    And then got a 360 AIO for my birthday.

    • @maozedowner5915
      @maozedowner5915 Рік тому +4

      Their stuff is the best. Top of the line performance and 1/3 the cost of other top of the line coolers.

    • @550LMS
      @550LMS Рік тому

      I had a 360mm AIO that died. Both my brothers (twins so identical pc too bought at the same time) had their 240 AIO die just a couple weeks before it.
      I got annoyed so bought the Thermal Assassin 120 for myself: Better cooling, less noise. Far more reliable. If it dies, only need to replace a fan. job done.

    • @pcgamer1206
      @pcgamer1206 Рік тому +1

      Yep! My PA120 is awesome on my 5800X, even with a decent OC (top 1% on 3D Mark CPU Profile) my temps are great and you can't beat the price!

    • @550LMS
      @550LMS Рік тому

      @@pcgamer1206 my cpu never goes over 65c even in the really hot summer here. With AIO it did get higher (before it broke, obviously). 11600K no OC

    • @Montisaquadeis
      @Montisaquadeis 11 місяців тому

      Picked up the Assassin 120 SE for roughly $35 to go with my Ryzen 7 5800x3D since that one doesn't have a cooler in the box.

  • @turbofanlover
    @turbofanlover Рік тому +10

    I was getting temps of 60 C at idle in the BIOS with the stock cooler that came with my Ryzen 5 5600. Replaced that piece of junk with a Deepcool AK620 and lowered the temps all the way down to 30 C. Much quieter now, too. Totally worth the added expense, IMO.

    • @uhm175
      @uhm175 11 місяців тому +4

      It really depends, My room is chill & cool all the time, so the stock cooler with my Ryzen 5 5600 works like charm & still going strong, never above 40 C

    • @sassuki
      @sassuki 11 місяців тому +2

      probably some wrong configuration, or bad mounting. No way you get 60°C in the BIOS with the stock cooler, unless you've done something terribly wrong.

  • @narwhal4304
    @narwhal4304 Рік тому +5

    As someone who recently rebuilt my PC with a 7800X3D, saw temperatures hit 91C with my not-very-old U12S Redux, and proceeded to order a Thermalright Phantom Spirit based on Hardware Canuck's air cooler testing with a 7700x, I would say yes buy an aftermarket cooler even if your CPU includes a stock cooler. And maybe consider a dual-tower cooler if your CPU has a higher TDP than 65w.

    • @uriahwilson5324
      @uriahwilson5324 11 місяців тому +1

      What temps you getting now? And what price did you snag it at? I found a 360 aio for a really decent price of 55 bucks so I couldn’t pass it up cause it’s the look I like in my system, I’ve got the same processor so I’m curious.

    • @narwhal4304
      @narwhal4304 9 місяців тому

      @@uriahwilson5324 Sorry for the late reply, just now seeing this. Got the Phantom Spirit for I think 34USD on Amazon. Temps now don't exceed mid-70s while gaming.

  • @kkrolik2106
    @kkrolik2106 Рік тому +5

    10+ Years already and my Noctua D-14 still works :) Currently AM5 and R5 7600

  • @s.h.5726
    @s.h.5726 Рік тому +18

    Air cooler for the win. Gonna last longer than liquid.
    Can't recommend overclocking if you got a K chip from intel, they push'em hard from factory.
    Last great oc chip I had was a AMD Phenom II 960T. 3.0ghz @ 4.0 overclock. Had 4.2ghz towards the end of using it and finding good bios settings.
    Also had a the celeron 366mhz @ 550mhz way back when overclocking took off.

    • @xpodx
      @xpodx Рік тому +1

      Looks ugly imo though.

    • @SunnyWave69
      @SunnyWave69 11 місяців тому +1

      @@xpodx Yeah, those tubes from AIO inside your PC look absolutely ugly.

    • @xpodx
      @xpodx 11 місяців тому

      @SunnyHunny74 mine are white and have tube combs, looks sick! Mines a phanteks 240mm glacier.

    • @rodneykeene
      @rodneykeene 11 місяців тому +1

      I thought the same thing until I got a 12900k. I used a Noctua NHD15 with a 8700k (not overclocked) and never had a problem running Handbrake to convert videos. I built a new computer with a 12900k ( also not overclocked) and thought I'd save a few bucks and reuse my NHD15. A couple of minutes after starting Handbrake the computer would reach 90+ degrees. A few seconds after hitting 90 it would lower all the CPU core frequencies and the computer would cool off and hold at 85 to 90 degrees. I bought a DeepCool LT720 360mm AIO and my computer idles at 25 degrees and max temp of 55-60 degrees when running Handbrake.

    • @illitero
      @illitero 11 місяців тому +1

      @@xpodx This. Here's the actual reason most people get aftermarket solutions: Looks. It's the same reason trucks and SUVs have completely taken over (or at least in the US where I'm at). When vanity supersedes necessity, people can convince themselves the extra cost is worth it despite not actually _needing_ it (or even being hindered by it)

  • @lars9925
    @lars9925 Рік тому +6

    I disagree. Put on a big air tower cooler, e.g. the biggest Noctua, and you will have a silent, reliable and enduring cooling solution for many CPU generations to come. Other components will also benefit.

    • @CLfreak246
      @CLfreak246 Рік тому

      That would be nice, but it doesn’t help for builds in Small Form Factors, like Micro ATX or Mini-ITX.

    • @thomasb4863
      @thomasb4863 11 місяців тому

      Yes! I swapped my amd stock cooler for noctua and it is so much quieter. When i used to play games it used to spin up and make such a noise

  • @monokendo
    @monokendo Рік тому +77

    even if im not overclocking i dont want a jet engine

    • @petrnovak7235
      @petrnovak7235 Рік тому +2

      Stock coolers for AMD Ryzen CPUs aren't really jet engines, though they are far from silent. Now, Intel stock coolers... that's a whole lot different story 😁

    • @Nonspecies
      @Nonspecies 11 місяців тому

      Be Quiet Dark Rock 4 non Pro or Pro and you can overclock with silence

    • @illitero
      @illitero 11 місяців тому

      You're not getting a "jet engine" unless something's wrong, chill out haha

    • @Qvik_
      @Qvik_ 11 місяців тому

      Then set the fan speed correctly manually? Damn. How are you overclocking anything if you can't even do this.

  • @tofu_golem
    @tofu_golem Рік тому +10

    I use an AIO largely for the lower noise under load. Also, I like that there is less weight attached to the motherboard.

    • @ouroesa
      @ouroesa Рік тому +2

      The back plate spreads that weight over a rather large area so damage to mobo is very unlikely. Agreed AIO is less noisy at load but typically more noisy at idle. Very depended on how it was set up as well.

    • @kingzach74
      @kingzach74 Рік тому +1

      @@ouroesa My Corsair h100i v2 AIO is nearly imperceptible at idle. I can't even hear it when I put my ear up to my case. Granted it has a zero DB mode when not under heavy load but a lot of AIOs have that feature now.
      Most of the time my Fridge is significantly louder than my PC even under load.

    • @MakerAventuras
      @MakerAventuras Рік тому

      @@ouroesa I had a Mobo die after my computer case fell from knee high while moving houses. I blame the aliexpress tower cooler (it worked like a champ though). Now I run a stock AMD cooler but instead of runing the stock one that came with my 3600x I am using the bigger one that came with the Ryzen 7. I bought it for 5€ from a guy that installed an AIO. Best bang for the buck, more than enough cooling for regular use and RGB. 🤣

    • @namegoeshere197
      @namegoeshere197 11 місяців тому +1

      Most AIOs are louder than a good air cooler.
      LTT even has a video about it

  • @itsme123126
    @itsme123126 Рік тому +7

    when i repllaced my ryzen 2600x with a 5700x i tried using the stock wraith cooler because i assumed due to the similar power usage id be fine...it was far from ok. id hit 77 80c which isnt throttling but still way hotter than my old ryzen 5 ran, until i bought an AIO, and now i get like 80c under full all core load at 4.4 ghz, and not when playing league of legends at locked 70 fps

    • @ouroesa
      @ouroesa Рік тому

      @@hugomatos1999 My man, you have A LOT to learn. If you don't know what you are talking about, rather don't say anything as you are only misleading people.
      TJMax for Ryzen 5000 series is 95deg C and these chips are designed to boost to temps >80c.

  • @virtuaconker85
    @virtuaconker85 Рік тому +5

    The i7 13700k is also a toasty CPU, I started off with a coolermaster 240 closed loop cooler and it was thermal throttling even when it was only at %50 usage and was at 60c+ on idle.
    I have since switched to Lian Li 360 closed loop cooler and now at idle its around 35c and under full load it hovers around 90c so yeah with some CPUs you NEED a good cooler.

    • @connorhall69
      @connorhall69 11 місяців тому

      I got a 12900k and I use a 360 mm aio runs nice

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio 11 місяців тому +1

      Same here, running a 13700K with Noctua NH-D15S. Barely does the job when under heavy load.

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio 11 місяців тому

      Contact frame helped a few spare degrees though.

    • @cemsengul16
      @cemsengul16 11 місяців тому

      Sadly AIO coolers are becoming a necessity because Intel is not as efficient as Ryzen.

  • @Visstnok
    @Visstnok Рік тому +34

    Ol' MacDonald had a CPU. AI-AIO!

  • @NineEyeRon
    @NineEyeRon Рік тому +10

    The intel stock cooler was cool but LOUD. For not a lot of money I reduced sound only. Its a non-OC CPU. If the stock cooler had been quiet I would have kept it.

    • @sassuki
      @sassuki 11 місяців тому

      that's because stup!d intel overclocks automatically too much on the Turbo, and goes beyond anything plausible! How the hell is anybody supposed to cool 250W?? Even big Noctuas struggle with these!

  • @Aeturnalis
    @Aeturnalis Рік тому +10

    3:20 skip ad

  • @Nonspecies
    @Nonspecies 11 місяців тому +1

    "Can you extant the Life of you CPU by getting a after Market Cooler?" "The Answer is probably no"
    What? The Answer is Yes. Why? After Market Cooler can the CPU better cool and so becomes the Lifetime of the CPU a expanse. The level of heat is the aging effect by a CPU.

  • @TurboTwinky28
    @TurboTwinky28 10 місяців тому +1

    my toxic trait is that i want to buy a liquid cooler for my ryzen 5 5600 while being 100% aware that the stock cooler [or at most a cheap aftermarket 1 fan air cooler is perfectly fine

  • @CoolJosh3k
    @CoolJosh3k Рік тому +2

    That way I see it is that better cooling allows a higher boost frequency, up to the rated max, but also to have more cores under load.
    If you are gaming with a modern GPU-bound title you might not need the extra CPU cooling, but if you are compiling code using 8 cores each at 100% load, then you probably want a “water” cooling solution.
    However, an aftermarket cooler that runs quietly is great for if you ever need extra cooling one day.
    Also of note is if you have a more efficient AMD CPU, or Intel.

  • @patrickm.4469
    @patrickm.4469 Рік тому +2

    3:45 I had one of those FX 6300 and it absolutely was a jet engine, outrageously loud

  • @ScorgeRudess
    @ScorgeRudess Рік тому +2

    0:06 Love the free blender kit assets from blender kit

  • @dagucka
    @dagucka 11 місяців тому +1

    I don't overclock anymore, but i overbuild cooling solutions because i don't want to hear my pc even when holding my ear to it while using it to the max

    • @eskieman3948
      @eskieman3948 11 місяців тому +1

      I design and overbuild my systems because, like you, I don't want to hear The Battle of the Fans, but in addition, I want my CPU running COLD. As a result, my CPU rarely exceeds 40 C even when gaming, and my 2080 Super GPU rarely exceeds 50 C. Cold components perform better, and last much longer, regardless of the BS spewed here. 'nuff said.

  • @sggsquadpresents
    @sggsquadpresents Рік тому +1

    the nzxt 240mm kraken cooler without rgb is around 140$. It feels worth it considering the fact that you get a small lcd screen

  • @jwesley235
    @jwesley235 Рік тому +2

    I just swapped out my NZXT Kraken for a Noctua DH-15; the Kraken could not keep up with my 5950X but the Noctua keeps it below 80C even under load.

  • @bygoneegowaitingremoval
    @bygoneegowaitingremoval 11 місяців тому

    I think you missed to mention that a stock cooler could greatly improve your CPU thermals if you want to keep using a case that doesn't have enough or good airflow. Having an AiO exhaust the hot air outside instead of throwing it all inside the case can help a lot while you finally decide to also improve your case

  • @Nayr7928
    @Nayr7928 Рік тому +3

    People in my country be having a stock 3600 or 12400F using AIOs + 20 bright case fans but then have a 720p GPU and 250GB storage

    • @DJ-ce8yh
      @DJ-ce8yh 11 місяців тому +1

      and then label their build "GAMING PC" :D

  • @Kochiha
    @Kochiha Рік тому +2

    Ah, the old reliable Hyper 212...I've still got a couple floating around for if I ever need to just jam something onto a computer and go.

  • @trentonbennettVO
    @trentonbennettVO 11 місяців тому

    Great exploration of multiple angles on the topic! I liked that you also threw in whether to use an older stock cooler or whether extra cooling overhead prolongs processor life. For fun I'll mention that from 2010 I gamed on an Intel Core i7 980X for about 7 years and continued to use that machine with zero issues in performance. I'm sure the people that got that system are still using it today. Stuff lasts longer than we necessarily need it to.

  • @atwitchyferret
    @atwitchyferret 11 місяців тому

    To be perfectly honest, I bought a water cooling block for looks. Literally the only RGB on the system is the water block with the LCD screen. Everything else is gray and black since I got a nice screen that is shiny instead of matte. I might try a tiny bit of overclocking, but I'm not expecting a big boost. My last system could not physically overclock because I was using a Ryzen 2000 series board with a Ryzen 3000 series chip. I'll figure it out depending on the thermals under load.

  • @thekeymaker6692
    @thekeymaker6692 6 місяців тому

    One thing you did not say is whether the stock cooler can fit inside your PC case and that there are slim options out there

  • @mkedzier123
    @mkedzier123 11 місяців тому +1

    You need one if you value silence.

  • @sergetheijspartner2005
    @sergetheijspartner2005 Рік тому

    Here is a little story from my experience, I once worked in electronics and worked for a company that made CD-players, DVD-players and recorders and such,tons of the quality tests entailed temperature tests and one of them in particular was a test where we tested machines in a big walk-in oven of 80°C, yes you read that right, we walked in to these ovens where the temp was 80°C, and ebing the engineer the question why arose and coincidentally I was given a course on quality tests by the company itself where this came up, the reason why, the person who gave the course said, is because there is a physics law SO EASY, that they didn't bother teaching you this one and hence why no one ever hears of it, the law goes as follows, for every 10°C every physical and chemical process goes twice as fast, so for a normal ambient temp like 30°C a device should last 10 years, now we are not going to wait for ten years to see what breaks, so 40° would make that 5 years, 50° would make that 2.5 years, 60° 1.25 years, 70° will cut that down to a little over 6 months and we had testphases that would only last 3 months because of the 80°C, and yes before you ask you can walk about 51 min in that oven before you succumbed to heat exposure, this was timed and usually not done alone for safety reasons.
    But me now knowing this physics law and already an avid PC builder at the time, I reversed the method of thinking, If heat makes my gaming rig lose overall quality and break, extensive cooling might keep it around for much longer and I can honestly say that my sone still is using a 12+ old rig and still gaming quite some hefty new games, off course I upgraded a lot since then, but the Watercooled, non-overclocked I7 is still the original one, probably going to change that one out soon but hey my cooling idea worked, this thing hardly ever reaches temps over 65°, and performs like a charm, so maybe if you are not in to overclocking maybe you are in to longevity, I even built my new rigs like this and I do not overclock, and I never have temp issues

  • @danser_theplayer01
    @danser_theplayer01 11 місяців тому

    For reference:
    I bought a cheap preabuilt pc.
    It has asus prime b450m-a motherboard. I updated the BIOS yesterday.
    It also has AMD Ryzen 5 3600 6-Core Processor 3.60 GHz.
    With a little overclock fiddling (PBO) in the BIOS with most settings left untouched (so I don't brick the pc) I run a OCCT test and get an average 3.88-3.9 GHz speed and 1.3V power at a cool temp of 85C (95C is max reported by manufacturer). At lower temps I get 4-4.1GHz speed.
    This seamless 0.4 GHz increase sounds pretty good for someone who doesn't try to break world records and just wants to game without spending much money.
    I have a stock fan-on-top-of-funny-heatsink setup to work 100% at 60C and above, and a manual throttle limit of 85C.
    I got these values in OCCT stability test.

  • @Beno
    @Beno 11 місяців тому

    Thermalright has a 360mL AiO cooler for less than $100 CAD and it comes with aRGB fans. You can it it even cheaper if you get the non-RGB one.

  • @lawnmower16
    @lawnmower16 Рік тому +1

    I don't remember the last time I bought a cpu that included a cooler. I always buy a noctua fan and heatsink; I've heard too many horror stories about AIO

  • @petrnovak7235
    @petrnovak7235 Рік тому

    After I bought 5600X in September 2021, I used stock cooler for a few months, along with stock fans that came with my case and I am telling you it was far from ideal. The CPU temps could get over 90 C. After a few months, I changed the case fans to Arctic P12 and that helped a little with the airflow, but I still got CPU temps over 80 in load. So, I went on and bought Fera 5 from, then, SilentiumPC, now Endorfy. Unless you are from Europe, you probably don't know this cooler, but here it is considered as ideal mid-range cooler, especially for CPUs, like 5600X. And it really helped. Very rarely I will get over 80 C, so, literally no thermal throttling anymore. and the noise level is also acceptable. So, while the stock cooler did its job, it was far from ideal even without overclocking and Fera 5 really did help me deal with the cooling issues I had. Of course, changing fans in my case for better airflow also helped. I am pretty sure Fera 5 itself wouldn't do such a good job if I kept my case's preinstalled fans. These things go hand in hand.

  • @mattnewton4755
    @mattnewton4755 11 місяців тому +1

    It would be cool if you can create a video about light-o-rama setup

  • @Lord_Mad_Dog
    @Lord_Mad_Dog 11 місяців тому +1

    i have a thermalright in an open air case. best decision i ever made for thermals, price, and noise

  • @gabrielnilo6101
    @gabrielnilo6101 10 місяців тому

    I use a Ryzen 5600 with a MASTERAIR MA620P (beefy air cooler) and a water-cooled 3090 with it.
    I use them to work and play games, but working with them is the main reason that I bought them.
    I am safe whenever I need to do any intensive work for long periods... like 90-100% loads for 5 hours without rest, they will easily stay below 60C.
    It's all about what you are doing.

  • @CrocoDylianVT
    @CrocoDylianVT 10 місяців тому

    2:24 when I built my PC I made this mistake, the PC came with an i3-4150, swapped it for an i7-4790K, kept the i3 cooler, big mistake, 100°C at barely 50% usage

  • @MariaCorrea-mr2gy
    @MariaCorrea-mr2gy 10 місяців тому

    I went custom water loop after my aio pump died. I no longer like the idea of not knowing what is happening inside and not really being simple to fix it. A new water pump is like 15 dollars. The waterblocks may be a bit more on the expensive side but you only need the cpu one and a radiator. Granted, now I have tons of radiators and waterblocks for cpu, gpu,ram and ssd but everything works better and its just switching a small part if you change a component.

  • @mray3308
    @mray3308 Рік тому

    I tried using stock cooler that came with my Ryzen 5600 on a new 5800x3d. It took like 10 mins for it to hit 90 degreess and start throtthling. I undervolted the CPU and it stabilized around 80 degrees during game play. But it was still too hot and I knew it wouldn't stay at that level when the weather gets hotter. I finally bought a deepcool AK620. Now the temperature is around 60 degrees during gameplays which is much lower than I expected and I'm very happy with it.

  • @nocturnal101ravenous6
    @nocturnal101ravenous6 11 місяців тому

    Yes, Alot of motherboard companies enable settings in UEFI that automatically OC and then you also have the EXPO/DOCP/XMP that is also considered an OC according to Intel and AMD.
    Honestly it depends, What are you going to do with your Computer? Gaming? Then yeah get a high end cooler for consistency of framerates, If you are a musician recording You probably want a watercooling system that will allow you to run a whisper quiet PC, Video? you might need the overhead depending on if you are using the Integrated GPU for acceleration on top of hammering all the cores.

  • @Chief_Eagle_Dropping
    @Chief_Eagle_Dropping 11 місяців тому

    Not sure that I agree with a word of this.....more than once I have had PC temps create shutdown scenarios, no overclock, with stock coolers.

  • @jamesdevine564
    @jamesdevine564 11 місяців тому +1

    People buy AIOs to to temps in gaming, streaming, video content editing as it regulates the temps I the case alone air cooled fans are ok but some are to bit and wide and collide with other components but people like the AIOs for the lighting effects and with fans mounted in other parts of the pushes out the hot air circulating around the case but the case plays a major factor in it.
    If u a decent case with lot of ventilation then a air cooler will do the job

  • @Suzuki_Hiakura
    @Suzuki_Hiakura 11 місяців тому

    I recall paying 50 dollars for an aftermarket CPU cooler, a medium sized air cooler, and my i7-8700k would hit 80C at only 20 percent usage... 95C-101C when it hit 30 percent usage before throttling or shutting off automatically. Paid about 60 dollars a few years later for a basic AIO (albeit a 240mm instead of a 120mm as I had enough of the cpu's bs lmao) and now it can reach 100 percent usage and still hang around 90C-95C; I have yet to see it thermal throttle due to the radiator. I was rather happy finding a "good deal" during the chip shortage on a "coffee" lake cpu, saying how it must be the one I need, as I love coffee (was actually a joke, and specs seemed best for the performance range and budget at the time); I had no idea when I read that coffee lake chips run hot, they meant they run HOT, and for years I just dealt with the 30 percent usage limit on my cpu, even going so far as to try and undervolt it to better manage the temps.

  • @felipenavas
    @felipenavas Рік тому

    I have a small case with a 5700G and nvidia 3600 And I bought a 120mm AIO Watercooler and I am very happy. I placed it at the back of the case and it blows the hot air from the CPU out. The whole system runs quieter and cooler now

  • @tetsmon
    @tetsmon Рік тому

    I set my RGB to red-orange when gaming because it means it is radiating more heat. I know because my electric stove also turns that color when it is hot, i've touched it before.

  • @Michael-kd4oi
    @Michael-kd4oi 9 місяців тому

    You kind of need a giant cooler air or liquid anyway. since modern cpu use every bit of thermal head room

  • @xellaz
    @xellaz Рік тому +2

    The legendary NH-D15 from Noctua was unable to cool my Ryzen 5950X adequately. I had to get an AIO CPU Liquid Cooler unfortunately... no RGB this time. 🤪

  • @Uncle_yandere
    @Uncle_yandere 11 місяців тому

    my stock cooler for i5 11400f was reaching over 80C at gaming, so a overkill cooler was a no brainer
    i bought a used Gammaxx 400 V2 at 15$ and very happy with it. cpu doesn't go nowhere near above 62C

  • @cirmothe9
    @cirmothe9 11 місяців тому

    I once started up a computer without a cooler attached. It got hot mighty fast.

  • @pedrosoares7273
    @pedrosoares7273 11 місяців тому

    We should only get aftermarket coolers for noise.
    Stock CPU coolers are noisy, and you should get one that can cool your cpu by making as little noise as your gpu.
    It's not worth it to get a overkill cpu cooler if your GPU keeps running louder.
    Usually this falls around the 30-50 dollar CPU Coolers for "regular" 65-125W CPUs
    Artic Freezer 34 is a good place to start

  • @shiromori_isao402
    @shiromori_isao402 11 місяців тому

    My only issue with this video is that they don't mention that some CPUs don't even come with the stock coolers anymore, and one would have to buy them seperatley anyway

  • @unividuv8902
    @unividuv8902 Рік тому +2

    I like this guy's explanation style and voice 😊

  • @o_krush67
    @o_krush67 11 місяців тому

    My observation: Also longer reliability and life kept cooler. And a Thermalright assasin is not super expensive and helps a lot over stock.
    I have run stock to start before and drop 20 later on a cooler. I currently runn a 127090k and picked up a Thermalright 360 AIO ($52) and so far has been solid. Keeps the temp extremely well conrolled even under load.

  • @austinriddick6414
    @austinriddick6414 Рік тому

    Considering the only stock cooler I ever tried to use was dead out of the box, I don't even bother using them. They're built to be as cheap as possible which to me means poor tolerances, low quality parts like fan motors and little care about noise. For $30-50 you can get a cooler that can be used on multiple builds if you get adapter plates it just makes more sense to get way better performance and longevity than the pack-in.

    • @Creepernom
      @Creepernom Рік тому

      50 bucks sounds cheap if you're american. For a lot of other countries, you just don't have that kind of budget to spend on a cooler, especially since a stock one or very cheap option proves more than adequate.

  • @Zatchillac
    @Zatchillac 11 місяців тому

    I have a Plex server with a basic i5-11400 (so no overclocking) that would ALWAYS thermal throttle whenever Plex did its background stuff when using the stock cooler. I put a $17 Thermalright cooler on it and that's no longer an issue. I'll never use included coolers again

  • @JoshuaFranklinDJ
    @JoshuaFranklinDJ Рік тому +1

    the chips I purchase, do *NOT* include stock coolers

  • @DPedroBoh
    @DPedroBoh Рік тому +1

    Absolutelly, but not so much. Ive spent some 200R$(like 40 dolars) on a thermaltake one i think and my 2600x went from 85 to hardly over 60 overclocked to run on 115w. Now I'm on a 5700x that cant run over 100w as far as i knoe so its very cool.

  • @Dougson
    @Dougson Рік тому +1

    I can't believe I just bought a 360mm AIO and then this video got posted literally 5 minutes later...

  • @DaWrecka
    @DaWrecka 11 місяців тому

    The stock cooler I got with my Ryzen 5 couldn't even prevent it from thermal throttling at load at stock clocks. That's right, I wasn't overclocking, and the AMD cooler was still inadequate.

  • @Rapscallion2009
    @Rapscallion2009 11 місяців тому

    Times change. 10 years ago chips were less efficient and left a lot of performance on the table for over clockers who could fight the raised temps. But most chips today are reasonably power efficient and don't offer vast results from over clocking before stability is threatened.

  • @malwacky
    @malwacky 11 місяців тому

    I use an AMD Prism cooler, with good case cooling, and while playing Fortnite at 240FPS while streaming, I hit 60°C Ryzen 5800X3D and fans still quiet. I thought I was going to need another cooler but I think not.

  • @robertmiles9942
    @robertmiles9942 Рік тому

    Noise level is all I care about. I always install a large-diameter fans and noctua air cooler when I build. I run my computer 24/7 and I can't hear it at all unless I'm gaming with the GPU. I also haven't bothered to overclock since Sandy Bridge.

  • @MarcSpctr
    @MarcSpctr Рік тому +1

    Stock Coolers ????
    Is that anymore a thing in 2024 ?
    last I checked neither Intel or AMD provides one with their CPUs except for maybe budget ones, which don't even generate massive amount of heat that we will need to put an AIO on them.

  • @justinr9753
    @justinr9753 Рік тому

    I spent $700 to cool my P4 3Ghz to a nice -32F, it had a built in heater to stop condensation

  • @hogcranker
    @hogcranker Рік тому

    I've always assumed that for overall airflow, its better to have an aftermarket cooler since it blows inline with the case's intake and exhaust, thus helping to remove heat from the entire case, particularly what rises from today's high-end GPUs

  • @CoolJosh3k
    @CoolJosh3k Рік тому +1

    Voltage doesn’t go through. It goes across.
    It is current that goes through.

  • @kuoasify
    @kuoasify Рік тому +1

    have two Cpu coolers from Corsair that are 9yrs old for how I never had an issue with them or with my ICUE H100i RGB pro XT. for how they are still running strong without issue for how I do not buy from MSI after seeing the failure rate they had. for how I only stick to products that I trust

  • @StretchDattass
    @StretchDattass Рік тому

    My stock cooled 5600x sounds like a jet from doing anything, even just opening chrome. Definitely getting a decent air cooler when I build a new PC later this year.

  • @voyager33mw
    @voyager33mw Рік тому

    My custom watercooling loop cools the cpu about as well as the 240mm aio I had previously, but putting my graphics card in the loop drastically reduced gpu hotspot temps.

  • @khulhucthulhu9952
    @khulhucthulhu9952 Рік тому

    aah yes, a week ago I upgraded from my intel stock cooler to an NH D15, and it's a world of difference!
    although part of it is that my GPU no longer fits in the slot because my motherboard sucks...
    but it runs faster, it runs cooler, it runs silent. amazing!

  • @SupraSav
    @SupraSav 11 місяців тому

    I switched to an AIO in September from my NHD15S after 4 trusty years of service. I bought my revision 1 AIO in September and it failed last week... RMA was supposed to send tracking info for the new revision 2, that was 8 business days ago. Still waiting,.. I ended up buying another AIO. Only reason I'm not using my air cooler is because it doesn't fit with a vertical mount GPU.

  • @BratCamp2008
    @BratCamp2008 Рік тому

    I got an aftermarket cooler (back in 2017) less for the CPU temps, but more for the airflow of my case. Normal mid-tower. The GPU dumps out heat like its trying to recreate a perfect environment for cooking a turkey. The stock cooler blew air up at the glass and tended to make the through-flow really turbulent when it met the GPU flow. Back then, I could have gotten some super expensive fans to force a better flow, or I could get a cheapo CPU cooler tower that was more inline with the flow. Went for obvious choice. $20 of 2017 money and the GPU dropped in temp and the whole case flow was better! (Could be just be my case configuration, as I'm sure this prolly wouldn't affect most ppl's setups!) (Side note: CPU not overclocked, but GPU is in a round-about kinda way)

  • @tristanwegner
    @tristanwegner Рік тому +1

    What unholy setup of PCBs and coolers is this from 0:18 onwards?

  • @marvlouslie2053
    @marvlouslie2053 Рік тому

    I just play games at realistic settings at stock speeds, and everything works great. I don't do any high end graphic rendering or video / photo editing. My Ryzen 3 3200g has been running stock since mid 2020, and it's trucking along just fine.

  • @am.ankitmon
    @am.ankitmon 11 місяців тому

    What happened to the videos where you guys used to explain technical terms and technologies. I still watch old one's whenever i want to learn stuff.

  • @catriona_drummond
    @catriona_drummond Рік тому

    I built a Ryzen 2700 System in 2019. Did not bother with the stock cooler but put a Noctua 120mm air cooler on it. It was alright, but seemed to struggle to hold max boost even though the temperature was still in the high 60's centigrade. I bought a 140mm Noctua cooler (one bigger) and it took off about 5 degrees of the CPU and it boosted higher and hat better performance in benchmarks.
    I noticed similiar effects with several Ryzen CPU's from 2000 to 5000 series. My evidence may be anecdotal but I do definitely recommend getting an aftermarket cooler, ideally one with enough thermal mass to absorb load spikes.
    I do agree that watercooling seems really unnecessary unless high end or overclocking.

  • @StroggKingu
    @StroggKingu Рік тому

    Sure, especially when now all of the recent cpus, try to boost by default as much as they can up to the max temp, so basic cooler always going to be stressed.

  • @had_fun_once
    @had_fun_once Рік тому

    I like my air cooler (BeQuiet Dark Rock Pro 4), but I have to admit I have to sigh in annoyance whenever I have to clean my PC because it's like removing Doom 3's Soul Cube from my PC every time I need to get underneath it. The size of the thing may just be the only mark against it.

  • @xoniumvortex
    @xoniumvortex 11 місяців тому

    This is half true, with modern systems the stock cooler will be fine, but given how ryzen 7000 and Intel 12th gen and up operate, they choose to run hot to get more clocks, more like a factory overclock. That means that if you slap on a better cooler you can get a little more performance out of it, plus you won't be running your pc so hot all the time, which means less noise.

  • @Wahinies
    @Wahinies Рік тому +2

    For V-Cache processors, liquid is needed to keep the fans from spinning up excessively because it does not spike temps like air does. At least this was my experience going from a 2*12cm tower to a 2*14cm AiO cooling a 5800X3D

  • @dogzs11
    @dogzs11 11 місяців тому +3

    Are CPU Coolers A Waste Of Money?
    Answer: NO.
    You're welcome.

  • @sigma682
    @sigma682 Рік тому +1

    I just really wanna do a build with hardline watercooling 😂

  • @rowan7929
    @rowan7929 Рік тому

    Use a copper pipe fan cooler from Cooler Master and it has been doing really well. Can't complain about sound either. And it wasnt expensive either. And my CPU is an intel 9th gen. Still running modern games just fine.

  • @ELCrisler
    @ELCrisler Рік тому

    Right now the air cooler market is in great shape with quite a few coolers at the $30 or so price point that will do the job very well.

  • @Wegetsignal
    @Wegetsignal Рік тому

    I don't overclock but I do typically buy a bit better cooler just to keep things running cooler in general. I always shoot for no more than 120F. Aggressive fan profiles.

  • @wolfbrave4866
    @wolfbrave4866 Рік тому

    I changed the stock cooler when it can't fit in a small form factor PC where a low profile cooler from noctua fit's in nicely.